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This week: Senate GOP picks up the pieces after agenda setback

Senate Republicans are looking for a path forward after a key GOP agenda pillar to repeal and replace ObamaCare ran off the rails early morning on Friday.

GOP senators will return to Washington on Monday to regroup after ceding months of time and political capital to trying to cobble together a deal on healthcare only to fall short during a dramatic middle-of-the-night vote.

While the House left town on Friday—less than a day after members were asked to stay “flexible” if a repeal bill passed the Senate—senators aren’t currently scheduled to leave Washington for the August recess until the end of next week.

“I had hoped, in honor of John McCain, we could do NDAA. I thought we could've probably worked out the Rand Paul issue on the floor there. And McCain, and [Jack] Reed, and I were talking to him,” he told reporters.

GOP leadership will huddle for the first time since the failed healthcare vote on Monday evening. The full caucus will hold its regular lunch on Tuesday, giving senators a chance to gather since they scattered following the ObamaCare repeal vote.

McConnell has also placed an FDA reauthorization bill on the Senate’s calendar, which would allow him to bring it up quickly.

He also said he wanted to try to raise the debt ceiling before lawmakers left.

But that vote appears likely to be kicked to the fall, as senators are heading toward the August recess without a deal in hand and the House already out of town.

Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said on Friday that the country will hit its debt limit by late September, potentially pushing the vote up against what could already be a contentious fall fight to fund the government.

Though healthcare appears to be shelved, at least for now, not every senator is ready to walk away.

"This group of senators met for dinner the other night to start sharing our ideas and discussing a path forward. While we still have a long way to go, we are starting to work together to try to get this done in a bipartisan way," Nelson said on Friday.

“I had a great meeting with the president," Graham said after the White House meeting. "President Trump was optimistic about the Graham-Cassidy-Heller proposal. I will continue to work with President Trump and his team."

Conservatives are also pledging that Friday’s early morning vote was not a final, fatal blow to one of the key pillars of their party’s agenda.

Republicans are also hoping to use their limited time before the August recess to work through a backlog of Trump’s nominees.

Democrats have been slow-walking the picks because of the fight over healthcare, but signaled they could agree to speed things up if the GOP effort to repeal ObamaCare fell short.

“Leader McConnell has made it clear he wants to move nominations. If we stop playing this game with TrumpCare … we could move on to all these other things in a good, strong, bipartisan way and start to get things done,” Schumer said last week ahead of the healthcare vote.